What blew my mind was when she texted him not to do it!!! Is that how parents, parent their children now? Send them a text!!¡And, Lol, tell him to not get caught. I. Cannot. With. These. People.
What blew my mind was when she texted him not to do it!!! Is that how parents, parent their children now? Send them a text!!¡And, Lol, tell him to not get caught. I. Cannot. With. These. People.
And they will get caught also, mom can eat her own words!And, Lol, tell him to not get caught. I. Cannot. With. These. People.
Seriously. Who does stuff like this? Abandon your kid to save your own sorry skin after you failed him.
Okay*Not Necessarily. But the immediate refusal to cooperate, telling their son not to say anything, then going on the lam are very reminiscent of those other parents i mentioned.
They’ve either deleted their profiles or made them private.I'm sure that would be an interesting read!
No worries. there is water between Michigan (and Ohio, and NY) for the entire Canadian border. It's not like in Montana, etc. which is a land border. Northern Wisconsin would be their closest land border.
In the area where I live Kia Souls are very popular with teens and young adults. You see them everywhere.They look like toasters on wheels, but are not especially eye-catching.
No one is saying all parents are bad, but in this particular case the parents most definitely seem to have enabled their son’s behavior. They refused to take him home when the school asked them to, they didn’t mention to the school in the meeting 3 hours before the shooting that he had access to a gun, and they BOUGHT him the gun and showed him how to use it, then stored it in an unlocked drawer so he would have easy access to the gun and three magazines.I'm sorry, but I do not agree with the theme of blaming the parents for their son's action. I'm on the side of reasonable accountability for the parents. Many parents have problems with their children, I'm not willing to jump on the bandwagon of parents bad. MOO
It's become a sad society when pitchforks are drawn before facts are known. Media lies sometimes, twists information sometimes, I am not on any side, but truth before fiction. MOONo one is saying all parents are bad, but in this particular case the parents most definitely seem to have enabled their son’s behavior. They refused to take him home when the school asked them to, they didn’t mention to the school in the meeting 3 hours before the shooting that he had access to a gun, and they BOUGHT him the gun and showed him how to use it, then stored it in an unlocked drawer so he would have easy access to the gun and three magazines.
These particular parents are beyond the pale.
I'm sorry, but I do not agree with the theme of blaming the parents for their son's action. I'm on the side of reasonable accountability for the parents. Many parents have problems with their children, I'm not willing to jump on the bandwagon of parents bad. MOO
It's become a sad society when pitchforks are drawn before facts are known. Media lies sometimes, twists information sometimes, I am not on any side, but truth before fiction. MOO
Enablers and likely indoctrinators, as well.They bought him a gun as a present. He drew disturbing things on a paper that he left on his school desk. His teacher turned it in to the office. His parents were called in and asked to take him to get medical help. They refused and sent him back to class. He then killed his schoolmates.
But, yeah, let's not jump on a 'bandwagon'. I'm sure they were caring parents. <sarcasm>
I totally agree that parents in general shouldn't be charged as they can have out-of-control kids that they've tried to get help for. And my heart breaks for these kind of parents. It must be devastating for them. This does not seem to be that case in this circumstance though. The Crubleys were enablers, based on what we've seen so far in the media. Let them absolve themselves in the court.
Yes, no bail! Don't let them "git away" again! If, that is, they are found and caught...and no bail.
JMO
I think these educators really thought he was suicidal more than anything else. I think they wanted therapeutic versus criminal intervention.I can't fully disagree with you, but I wonder how many American schools are dealing with 'warning signs' every week. Can they just shut down their schools constantly? Having said that, I think there were many, many signs that there was a serious risk in this particular case, so I agree with you.
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